Legal Director and General Counsel at the Electronic Frontier Foundation (EFF)
Position:
Con to the question "Do electronic voting machines improve the voting process?"
Reasoning:
"The computerized voting machines being used and sold in California today plainly fail to meet those basic standards, and the risk of injuring our democracy is too great for us to simply cross our fingers and hope that the significant problems we have experienced so far will not recur in November."
Testimony before the California Voting Systems and Procedures Panel, Apr. 26, 2004
Experts
Election officials, people with post-graduate degrees in a computer or political science, JD's, Members of Congress, or elected officials with significant involvement in, or related to, electronic voting machine issues.
Involvement and Affiliations:
Legal Director and General Counsel, Electronic Frontier Foundation (EFF), 2000-present
Coordinator - EFF's national litigation strategy for electronic voting machines
Board Director - Verified Voting Foundation
Member - National Committee for Voting Integrity
Top 100 Most Influential Lawyers in America, National Law Journal, 2006
Testified before the California Voting Systems and Procedures Panel, Apr. 2004
Honored by the Editorial Board of Daily Journal, 2001
Top Lawyers of the Year, California Lawyer magazine, 1997